Art of TennesseeSurveying the history of aesthetic expressions from the earliest Native American populations to the most significant artists of our own times, the Art of Tennessee exhibit, running from September 13, 2003, through January 18, 2004, at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville, includes approximately 250 of the most extraordinary examples of paintings, sculptures, furniture, quilts, pottery, silver, maps, and other forms of art created throughout Tennessee or that relate to Tennessee. Contributors to the exhibition catalog: Chase Rynd, Ben Caldwell, Robert Hicks, Mark Scala, Jefferson Chapman, Wendell Garrett, Ann Wells, Jonathan Fairbanks, Tracey Parks, Rick Warwick, Samuel Smith, Steven Rogers, Elizabeth Ramsey, Candace Adelson, Jim Hoobler, Estill Curtis Pennington, James Kelly, Marsha Mullin, Dan Pomeroy, Jack Becker, Celia Walker, John Wood, Michael Hall, Leslie King-Hammond, Susan Knowles, Amy Kirschke, and Lynn Ennis. |
Contents
Fine | 6 |
TENNESSEANS ON THE NATIONAL STAGE | 167 |
William Gilbert Gaul as a Military Artist | 194 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Art of Tennessee Benjamin Hubbard Caldwell,Frist Center for the Visual Arts (Nashville, Tenn.) No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
Aaron Douglas abstract African American American Art Andrew Jackson antebellum Art of Tennessee artist Benton cabinetmaker carved chair Chattanooga Cherry Civil Coin silver color Country Music Courtesy craft Cragfont created culture Cumberland Curator Davidson County decorative depicts early East Tennessee Elliston Engraved exhibition figures Fisk University furniture Gallery Gaul Gertrude Caldwell glaze Henry Hermitage Houston images inspired James John Knoxville landscape lives maker maps Memphis Middle Tennessee modern mural Museum Collection Museum of Art Nashville National nessee nineteenth century North Carolina Oil on canvas painter Painting in Tennessee Philadelphia photograph pieces Polk portrait pottery Poynor president Press produced quilt region River scene sculpture silversmiths South Southern Stoneware studied style sugar chest Sumner County symbols Tennes Tennesseans Tennessee art Tennessee Historical Tennessee State Museum Tennessee's Thomas tion tradition tulip poplar University of Tennessee Virginia William Edmondson Williamson County Winchester wood York